Among the variety of findings, this one stood out the most: in IRI-tracked spaces (grocery, convenience, big box, etc.) the Twisted Tea family of brands surpassed the collection of Sam Adams brands in year-to-date dollar sales. In fact, it's been a long time coming.

Through the first 39 weeks of 2017, Twisted Tea ($199,353,081) has outsold Sam Adams ($197,857,496) by $1.5 million. To put this in perspective, Sam Adams had sold $76.2 million more through the same time in 2016.

Part of the challenge has been the decreased sales of flagship brand Boston Lager as well as the challenge of keeping interest in Rebel IPA. Both are still selling *millions* worth of six and 12-packs, but Boston Beer is a publicly traded company and these kinds of things get a bit awkward when success can't be sustained.

Note this is *just* for packaged Boston Lager tracked through IRI stores off-premise, and this beer's significant draft footprint most certainly buoys its decline seen here.

The same applies for Rebel IPA, which had the most profitable debut of a craft beer ever in 2014, and even built on that in 2015, and has declined since.

An odd time for a company that has "beer" in its name when its flavored malt beverages are really the ones showing the most energy at the moment. Maybe a New England IPA (really) and a rose (wine)-inspired cider (yes, really) will be a solution in 2018?